Smart Buildings| An Integrative Double Skin Facade Damper System for Safety and Energy Efficiency

<p> A smart building is an intelligent living space that elevates energy efficiency, comfort and safety. The word &ldquo;smart&rdquo; implies that the building would have a decision making system that can sense its conditions and reacts to them in an automatic and effective manner. Mod...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Zhang, Rui
Language:EN
Published: University of New Hampshire 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:http://pqdtopen.proquest.com/#viewpdf?dispub=10688477
id ndltd-PROQUEST-oai-pqdtoai.proquest.com-10688477
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-PROQUEST-oai-pqdtoai.proquest.com-106884772018-03-15T15:59:24Z Smart Buildings| An Integrative Double Skin Facade Damper System for Safety and Energy Efficiency Zhang, Rui Engineering|Civil engineering|Mechanical engineering <p> A smart building is an intelligent living space that elevates energy efficiency, comfort and safety. The word &ldquo;smart&rdquo; implies that the building would have a decision making system that can sense its conditions and reacts to them in an automatic and effective manner. Modem buildings contain many subsystems and, thus, to achieve automation, sophisticated sensing networks and robust control systems must be installed. The proposed research focuses on integrating several building systems&mdash;structural health monitoring (SHM), and structural and environmental controls&mdash;and explores synergy among them to improve efficiency and sustainability of buildings. </p><p> More specifically, an integrative, smart building system is developed by combining double skin fa&ccedil;ades and mass dampers in buildings to improve both safety and energy efficiency. Double skin fa&ccedil;ade systems protect and insulate buildings with two heavy glass layers between which air is allowed to flow for ventilation. By enabling movements in the outer fa&ccedil;ade skin, the fa&ccedil;ade can be used as a mass damper that reduces structural vibration and damage during earthquakes and wind storms. The added mobility also leads to innovative ways to control ventilation rate and improve energy efficiency by adjusting the gap size between the outer and inner skins. </p><p> In this dissertation research, the energy impact of the integrated system was first investigated. Then both passive and active structural control strategies were experimented and analyzed on a six-story shear building model. Results indicated the proposed system can significantly reduce structural response under the earthquakes excitations. In addition, the sensor networks and actuators introduced by the active structural control system were utilized for structural health monitoring purposes. The actuators provided harmonic excitations while the acceleration data were collected by the sensor networks to perform damage diagnosis. </p><p> Finally, since typical SHM systems require large networks of sensors that are costly to install, this dissertation research also examined using smartphones as alternative sensors. Using the aforementioned six-story experimental structure, a sensing system consisted of six smartphones was tested and proven effective in detecting structural damage. The experimental result demonstrates that further developments of smartphone SHM can lead to cost-effective and quick sensor deployments.</p><p> University of New Hampshire 2018-03-14 00:00:00.0 thesis http://pqdtopen.proquest.com/#viewpdf?dispub=10688477 EN
collection NDLTD
language EN
sources NDLTD
topic Engineering|Civil engineering|Mechanical engineering
spellingShingle Engineering|Civil engineering|Mechanical engineering
Zhang, Rui
Smart Buildings| An Integrative Double Skin Facade Damper System for Safety and Energy Efficiency
description <p> A smart building is an intelligent living space that elevates energy efficiency, comfort and safety. The word &ldquo;smart&rdquo; implies that the building would have a decision making system that can sense its conditions and reacts to them in an automatic and effective manner. Modem buildings contain many subsystems and, thus, to achieve automation, sophisticated sensing networks and robust control systems must be installed. The proposed research focuses on integrating several building systems&mdash;structural health monitoring (SHM), and structural and environmental controls&mdash;and explores synergy among them to improve efficiency and sustainability of buildings. </p><p> More specifically, an integrative, smart building system is developed by combining double skin fa&ccedil;ades and mass dampers in buildings to improve both safety and energy efficiency. Double skin fa&ccedil;ade systems protect and insulate buildings with two heavy glass layers between which air is allowed to flow for ventilation. By enabling movements in the outer fa&ccedil;ade skin, the fa&ccedil;ade can be used as a mass damper that reduces structural vibration and damage during earthquakes and wind storms. The added mobility also leads to innovative ways to control ventilation rate and improve energy efficiency by adjusting the gap size between the outer and inner skins. </p><p> In this dissertation research, the energy impact of the integrated system was first investigated. Then both passive and active structural control strategies were experimented and analyzed on a six-story shear building model. Results indicated the proposed system can significantly reduce structural response under the earthquakes excitations. In addition, the sensor networks and actuators introduced by the active structural control system were utilized for structural health monitoring purposes. The actuators provided harmonic excitations while the acceleration data were collected by the sensor networks to perform damage diagnosis. </p><p> Finally, since typical SHM systems require large networks of sensors that are costly to install, this dissertation research also examined using smartphones as alternative sensors. Using the aforementioned six-story experimental structure, a sensing system consisted of six smartphones was tested and proven effective in detecting structural damage. The experimental result demonstrates that further developments of smartphone SHM can lead to cost-effective and quick sensor deployments.</p><p>
author Zhang, Rui
author_facet Zhang, Rui
author_sort Zhang, Rui
title Smart Buildings| An Integrative Double Skin Facade Damper System for Safety and Energy Efficiency
title_short Smart Buildings| An Integrative Double Skin Facade Damper System for Safety and Energy Efficiency
title_full Smart Buildings| An Integrative Double Skin Facade Damper System for Safety and Energy Efficiency
title_fullStr Smart Buildings| An Integrative Double Skin Facade Damper System for Safety and Energy Efficiency
title_full_unstemmed Smart Buildings| An Integrative Double Skin Facade Damper System for Safety and Energy Efficiency
title_sort smart buildings| an integrative double skin facade damper system for safety and energy efficiency
publisher University of New Hampshire
publishDate 2018
url http://pqdtopen.proquest.com/#viewpdf?dispub=10688477
work_keys_str_mv AT zhangrui smartbuildingsanintegrativedoubleskinfacadedampersystemforsafetyandenergyefficiency
_version_ 1718616408837849088